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Digital sovereignty has gained new urgency amid rising geopolitical tensions, with some European IT leaders reconsidering their reliance on global cloud providers.
'Intense lobbying efforts in Germany, Italy and other countries in Europe may force us to withdraw this feature to the detriment of European consumers,' the company said.
The government has hit Apple with a demand for UK customer data.
Apple wants to build products that connect you to others, rather than wrapping you in a tech bubble.
The tech giant was ordered to pay $425 million by the San Francisco jury, while France imposed $381 million (€325 million) fine in a coordinated assault on data collection practices.
Traditional data protection is no longer enough. Huawei delivers four layers of protection to make your data untouchable.
Legal challenge by French MP rejected by the EU's General Court, but experts predict ruling will be appealed.
The UK government may not have told the truth about its plans to break Apple's data encryption.
FTC Chairman puts 13 major companies on notice that weakening US consumer protections could violate federal law.
The decision represents a victory for common sense, digital privacy, and commerce.
The complaint filed in California district court says the popular transcription service records users and uses their voices and data to train its models without consent.
Your weekly round-up of the questions asked by readers of CIO, Computerworld, CSO, InfoWorld, and Network World examines how agentic AI will change the careers of software developers; how useful is Microsoft CoPilot in Excel; and what are the security challenges of using AI for data platforms.
Google refuses to deny that it received a demand from the UK government to install backdoor access into its services.
It turns out that a lot of people apparently don't trust age-verification services.
How to use workforce data as a strategic advantage
The post Ultimate Guide to Workforce Analytics appeared first on Whitepaper Repository -.
AI tools are making it faster and easier than ever to find personal details about anyone, often turning harmless online information into real-world risk. In this episode of Today in Tech, host Keith Shaw speaks with Chris Wingfield, a former military digital targeter and now SVP at 360 Privacy, about how generative AI is transforming online surveillance. They explore how scammers, stalkers, and even corporate actors use AI to weaponize public data — and what individuals and businesses can do to protect themselves. From Google searches to Zillow listings and LinkedIn profiles, your digital trail is more dangerous than you think.
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